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MGT301 Principles of Marketing

Composed By Faheem Saqib

Current & Past Final Term Solved Questions

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Mgt301 Current and Past Solved


Subjective

Q no. 1: Direct market selling benefit.

Direct marketing means selling products by dealing directly with consumers rather than
through intermediaries.

Traditional methods include mail order, direct-mail selling, cold calling, telephone
selling, and door-to-door calling. More recently telemarketing, direct radio selling,
magazine and TV advertising, and on-line computer shopping have been developed.

The main advantages/ benefits of selling direct are that there is no need to share profit
margins and the producer has complete control over the sales process. Products are not
sold alongside those of competitors either.

Q no. 2: How can company attack on competitors?

Q no. 3: Objective of internet Marketing


There are the following objectives of internet marketing

Increasing direct revenue – One of the basic objectives of Internet Marketing is to


increase the direct revenue of the company by focuses direct audience.
Building a brand image – is a long term objective to make an image of brand into the
mind of audience.
Communicate company’s message – about itself, its products and its services
Performing research – to identify the nature of marketing basis on
demographic, preferences and need of existing and future customers.
Advertising – the products and services to the audience of virtual world.

Q no. 4: One question was related to mass marketing and new marketing concept?

Mass marketing:

An attempt to appeal to an entire market with one basic marketing utilizing


mass distribution and mass media. Also called undifferentiated marketing.

New marketing:

New marketing concept is a philosophy. It makes the customer, and the satisfaction of his
or her needs, the focal point of all business activities. It is driven by senior managers,
passionate about joy their customers.

Q no. 5: One Question was on Cash cow, star and Question related?

a). Stars are high-growth, high-share businesses or products (they need heavy investment
to finance their rapid growth potential).

b). Cash Cows are low-growth, high-share businesses or products (they are established,
successful, and need less investment to hold share).

c). Question Marks are low-share business units in high-growth markets (they require a
lot of cash to hold their share).

d). Dogs are low-growth, low-share businesses and products (they may generate enough
cash to maintain them, but do not have much future).

Q no. 6: One question was related to public relation and publicity?

Public relations include ongoing activities to ensure the overall company has a strong
public image. Public relations activities include helping the public to understand the
company and its products. Often, public relations are conducted through the media that is,
newspapers, television, magazines, etc. As noted above, public relations are often
considered as one of the primary activities included in promotions.

Publicity is mention in the media. Organizations usually have little control over the
message in the media, at least, not as they do in advertising. Regarding publicity,
reporters and writers decide what will be said.

1. What are the various tools of Public Relations? Name at least five.

1. PRINT MEDIA
2. PRESS RELEASE
3. PHOTOGRAPHS
4. BROCHURE
5. POSTER AND CALENDAR
6. WRITTEN SPEECH
7. INTERNAL NEWSLETTERS AND PUBLICATIONS
8. EVENT AND PRESS SUPPOR
9. CONFERENCES AND SEMINARS
10. NTERNET
11. E-MAIL
12. AUDIO AND VISUAL
13. NEWS AND PUBLICITY

2. Name any five elements of the communication process.

There are the following elements of communication process.

1. Source.
2. encoding
3. Message.
4. channel
5. decoding
6. receiver
7. feedback

3. For what purpose public policy principles can be used? List down the key
principles for public policy towards marketing.

4. How BCG matrix is beneficial for companies? Explain briefly.

The origin of the Boston Matrix lies with the Boston Consulting Group in the early
1970s. It was devised as a clear and simple method for helping corporations decide which
parts of their business they should allocate their available cash to. Following the credit
crunch, this is newly important in some sectors because of the limited availability of
credit.
However, the Boston Matrix is also a good tool for thinking about where to apply other
finite resources: people, time and equipment.

Benefits:

 It is simple and easy to understand.


 It helps to quick and simply screen opportunities open to you, and help you think
about how you can make the most of them.
 It is used to identify how corporate cash resources can best be used to maximize a
company’s future growth and profitability.

5. What are Web Communities? Also mention its uses.

A web community is a web site (or group of web sites) that is a virtual community. A
web community may take the form of a social network service, an Internet forum, a
group of blogs, or another kind of social software web application.

6. MR. X wants to start a business that would sell books online directly to the
customers. What type of distribution channel would you recommend that MR.X
should adopt.

One of the importance’s of any website or business is to bring your products or services
to the right people and to reach the target audience. There are a number of different
distribution channels available on the Internet which could be utilized efficiently to the
benefits of your website.
Distribution channels:

I would suggest to the following channels.


1. Social networks (Facebook, MySpace, Friendster)
The current trend of the Internet is social interactions, and the trend is here to stay for a
while. Multi-million corporations are in the hunt to acquire popular social networking
sites because they understand the potential and the impact social networking has on
Internet users. Treating social networks such as Facebook and MySpaceas your
distribution channels mean reaching to more people and increasing awareness of your
website.
2. Social bookmarks (del.icio.us, Stumble Upon, Digg)
Social bookmarks enable users to share, organise and store URLs of websites they like
and/or find useful. And because social bookmarks are created by users who understand
the content of the website they bookmark, it makes it easier for other users to find stuff
related to an interest.
3. Social media (YouTube, Flickr, Podcasts)
As with social networks and social bookmarks, social media has become increasingly
popular among Internet users for the same reasons. Using a social media
like YouTube or Flickr as a medium to promote your business could bring a lot of traffics
to your website. In an official Press Release about an agreement between CBS and
YouTube, it was said that “Today’s agreement demonstrates that YouTube has become a
revenue-generating distribution channel for major networks and other media companies.
By partnering with YouTube, media companies can now have a two-way dialogue with
viewers who can provide feedback about what they find entertaining.”
4. Blogs
Blogs are popular because they provide up-to-date information and enables readers to
engage in discussions via comments. By using blog as a distribution channel, businesses
can build a loyal readership and interact with their customer base.
5. Widgets and gadgets (Yahoo! widgets, iGoogle gadgets, Facebook APIs)
Widgets and gadgets deliver dynamic and updated content to the users at any time. They
leverage the website’s content to create new opportunities, extend users and strengthen
the presence of your brand. And for that very reason, widgets and gadgets have proven to
be a very successful method of distribution.
6. Browser extensions
Browser extensions such as cutomised search engine, add-ons, and toolbars provide users
with an easy access to your website and the functionalities that it offers instantly from
their favourite browser. It is an effective distribution channel for both the business and
end users as it maximizes access and visibility for both parties.
7. Search engines
According to a survey conducted in 1998 by Georgia Institute of Technology, 85% of
users found websites through search engines (Tri-Media). While many believe that “if
you build it, they will come”, the truth is, they can only come when they know about it.
Therefore, the power of search engine optimisation (SEO) and search engine marketing
(SEM) should be used to drive targeted and qualified traffic to your website and improve
visibility of your business.

7. How will you regard a company as one having "Global Vision"?

8. Differentiate between exploratory and descriptive research?

The basic difference between exploratory and descriptive research is the research design.

Exploratory research is a type of research done when the problem has not been clearly
defined. It is used to help determine the best way to research, collect data, and subject
selection.

Descriptive research, used often in social sciences and market research, is the study of
how a particular group, person, or thing behaves. Observations are noted without
influence being applied.
OR
The basic difference between exploratory and descriptive research is the research design.
Exploratory research follows a format that is less structured and more flexible than
descriptive research. This approach works well when the marketer doesn’t have an
understanding of the topic or the topic is new and it is hard to pinpoint the research
direction. The downside, however, is that results may not be as useful in aiding a
marketing decision. So why use this method? In addition to offering the marketer basic
information on a topic, exploratory research may also provide direction for a more formal
research effort. For instance, exploratory research may indicate who the key decision
makers are in a particular market thus enabling a more structured descriptive study
targeted to this group.

MGT 301 SHORT QUESTIONS


Question: What is the difference between mass marketing and database marketing?
Answer: In the data base marketing we have all the relevant information of the target
market and we have made the records of the relevant information in the form of the
data bases. Mass marketing means the marketing at the large scale marketing in which
we do not have the data base form of record of our customer because our target
market is very large and the products are produced by the general common character.

Question: What is the role of broker and agent in the marketing system?
Answer: Main function is to facilitate buying and selling, for which they earn a
commission on the selling price. Generally, specialize by product line or customer
types. BROKERS: Chief function is bringing buyers and sellers together and assisting
in negotiation. They are paid by the party who hired them, and do not carry inventory,
get involved in financing, or assume risk. Examples: food brokers, real estate brokers,
insurance brokers, and security brokers. AGENTS: Represent either buyers or sellers
on a more permanent basis than brokers do.

Question: What is mean by Competitive Advantage? How we will design a


Competitive Intelligence System?
Answer: To be successful, a company must consider its competitors as well as its
actual and potential customers. In the process of performing a competitor analysis, the
company carefully analyzes and gathers information on competitors’ strategies and
programs. A competitive intelligence system helps the company acquire and manage
competitive information. The company must then choose a competitive marketing
strategy of its own. The strategy chosen depends on the company’s industry position
and its objectives, opportunities, and resources. Some of these are time-tested and
some are relatively new .The advantage of our firm with comparison to our
competitors which may be in term of low price, high quality,
Easy availability of our product, good will, convenience in use etc is included.

Question: Define business markets?


Answer: The business market includes firms that buy goods and services in order to
produce products and services to sell to others.

Question: Why do we study consumer behavior?


Answer: Consumers determine the sales and profits of a firm by their purchase
decisions. Basic objective of studying consumer behavior is that the firm needs to
know how, when, why, and where consumers make purchase decision/ all these are
important questions, which are to be known to the companies so that they can design
and implement marketing strategies to satisfy the customers.

Question: How does an organization create a customer?


Answer: Organizations can create the customers by identifying customer’s needs,
designing goods and services that meet those needs then communicating information
about those goods and services to prospective buyers. Providing the necessary
services and follow-up to ensure customer satisfaction after the purchase.

Question: Briefly define customer and consumer?


Answer: A Customer- purchases or pays for products or services A Consumer- is
ultimate user of the product or service, the consumer may not have paid for the
product or service.

Question: Which factors make the company’s macro environment?


Answer: 1) Demographic 2) Economic 3) Natural 4) Technological 5) Political 6)
Cultural

Question: Which are the strategies that can be pursued for each Strategic Business
Unit (SBU)?
Answer: a) The company can harvest the SBU b) The company can divest the SBU
c) The company can invest enough just to hold at the current level

Question: What are the key principles for public policy towards marketing?
Answer: a) Full consumer and producer freedom b) Potential harm should be
eliminated c) Producer should meet the basic needs of the consumer

Question: What is meant by Market?


Answer: Markets The concepts of exchange and relationships lead to the concept of a
market. A market is the set of actual and potential buyers of a product. Originally a
market was a place where buyers and sellers gathered to exchange goods (such as a
village square). Economists use the term to designate a collection of buyers and
sellers who transact in a particular product class (as in the housing market)
Marketers see buyers as constituting a market and sellers constituting an industry.

Question: Explain Business portfolio?


Answer: The business portfolio is a collection of businesses and products that make
up the company. In order to design the business portfolio, the business must: 1)
Analyze its current business portfolio and decide which business should receive more,
less or no investment. 2) Develop growth strategies for adding new products or
business to the portfolio.

Question: Who are Laggards?


Answer: The people who are suspicious to change and adopt only after the product
has been accepted by the majority

Question: Why it is said that customer is always right even he is wrong/customer is


the king of market?
Answer: 'Putting the customer at the heart of your business planning' sounds simple
doesn't it? The truth is, this principle is the cleverest, and also the most startlingly
logical strategy for keeping your business at the forefront of its market. The customer
is king. This statement is true of every aspect of business. It is the job of everyone in
business to please customers - or to enable someone else to please the customer. Without
customers, there is no sale. Without satisfied customers, there is no profit.
Without delighted customers, there is no repeat business.

Question: What are the objectives of internet marketing?


Answer: Internet is very important tool in marketing .It is useful for marketers in
different ways like: Internet is a new tool to reach consumers. Internet is also being
used as a source to reach and to communicate to customers.

Question: What are the steps involved in developing an effective communication?


Answer: Identify the target audience Determine the communication objectives
Design a message Choose the media through which to send the message Select the
message source Collect the feed back

Question: Briefly define the black box?


Answer: 1. the buyer’s characteristics influence how he/she perceive and react to
stimuli.
2. The buyer’s decision process itself affects the buyer’s behavior
Question: What is meant by reach and frequency?
Answer: Reach is a measure of the percentage of people in the target market who are
exposed to the ad campaign during a given period of time. For example, the advertiser
might try to reach 70 percent of the target market during the first three months of the
campaign. Frequency is a measure of how many times the average person in the target
market is exposed to the message. For example, the advertiser might want an average
exposure frequency of three.

Question: Why we study marketing?


Answer: Major reason to study marketing is: • Marketing plays an important role in
society • It is Vital to business • Marketing offers outstanding career opportunities •
Marketing affects your life every day

Question: Which important decisions we should take while developing an advertising


program for the product?
Answer: 1 .Setting advertising objectives 2. Setting advertising budgets 3. Developing
advertising strategy 4. Message decisions 5. Media decisions 6.
Evaluating advertising campaigns

Question: What 4 Cs will be used for the development of the marketing strategies of
21st centaury?
Answer: a) Care b) Choice c) Community d) Challenge

Question: What do you understand by the term micro marketing environment?


Answer: Micro marketing is the practice of tailoring products and marketing
programs to suit the tastes of specific individuals and locations. Micro marketing
includes local marketing (Local marketing involves tailoring brands and promotions
to the needs and wants of local customer groups—cities, neighborhoods, and even
specific stores.
Question: In buyer decision process, what are the sources from which buyer can
collect information?
Answer: These include personal sources (family, friends, neighbors, acquaintances),
commercial sources (advertising, salespeople, dealers, packaging, displays, Web
sites), public sources (mass media, consumer-rating organizations), and experiential
sources (handling, examining, using the product). The relative influence of these
information sources varies with the product and the buyer.

Question: Define business markets?


Answer: The business market includes firms that buy goods and services in order to
produce products and services to sell to others.

Question: Write down any five reasons of “why would a producer use wholesalers
rather than selling directly to consumers or retailers”?
Answer: Quite simply, wholesalers are often better at performing one or more of the
following channel functions: • Selling and promoting • Buying and assortment
building. • Bulk-breaking • Warehousing • Transportation • Financing • Risk bearing •
Market information • Management services and advice

Question: List down the chief factors that can be used for segmenting international
markets?
Answer: Geographical location Economic factors Political and legal factors
Cultural factors

Question: How would you define relationship marketing?


Answer: Establishing a long term continuous relationship with the customers initiated
and maintained by firm.

Question: What are the main advantages of having brand quality?


Answer: 1) High consumer awareness 2) Easier to launch brand extensions because of
high brand credibility 3) A good defense against fair price competition. 4)
Customer equity tends to aid marketing planning in assuring loyal customer life time
values.

Question: What is the difference between advertising and publicity?


Answer: An old age says: Advertising you pay for, publicity you pray for. That's
because publicity has at least ten times the credibility of advertising. Advertising is a
content you pay to present. Publicity refers to free content about you that appears in
the media - what others say about you. Publicity can result when an article you write
is published, or when information you give to an editor convinces him/her to feature a
story about you. Over time, these stories help to create a favorable impression of your
product or services.

Question: Define the market / product expansion grid?


Answer: 1). Market Penetration 2). Market Development 3). Product Development
4). Diversification

Question: Why we use sales promotion tools? Answer: These can be used to introduce
new products, Get existing customers to buy
more, Attract new customers, and Combat competition, Maintain sales in off season,
Increase retail inventories, Tie in advertising and personal selling, Enhance personal
selling efforts.

Question: Designing a Competitive Intelligence System


Answer: The Company must design a broad competitive strategy by which to gain
competitive advantage. No one strategy, however, is best for all companies. The
competitive intelligence system does the following: • Identifies the vital types of
competitive information and the best sources of this information. • The system
continuously collects information from the field and from published data. • The
system checks the information for validity and reliability, it, and organizes it in an
appropriate way. • It sends key information to relevant decision makers and responds
to inquiries from managers about competitors.
Question: Describe the main reasons for the popularity of markup pricing?
Answer: 1. Sellers are more certain about cost than about demand. 2. When all firms
in the industry use this pricing method, prices tend to be similar and price competition
is thus minimized. 3. Many people feel that cost-plus pricing is fairer to both buyers
and sellers.

Question: How does an organization create a customer?


Answer: Organizations can create the customers by identifying customer’s needs,
designing goods and services that meet those needs then communicating information
about those goods and services to prospective buyers .Providing the necessary
services and follow - up to ensure customer satisfaction after the purchase.

Question: What steps we should take to promote the company’s products?


Answer: Advertising the Product Selection of Media Cost benefit analysis of different
media advertising on the TV, radio and Cable network Distribution of pamphlets
Fixing sign boards on famous locations advertising on renowned newspaper

Question: List down the 5 M’s of Advertising?


Answer: Mission Money Message Media Measurement

Question: What are the five important decisions which must take into consideration
by the marketing management, while developing an advertising program?
Answer: Setting advertising objectives setting advertising budgets developing
advertising strategy Message decision and media decision evaluating advertising
campaign

Question: What are the primary criticisms of marketing functions with respect to the
impact on the individual consumer?
Answer: High price Deceptive practices high pressure selling Shoddy or unsafe
products Planned obsolescence Poor services to disadvantaged consumer

Question: What is meant by sequential product development?


Answer: A new product development approach in which one company’s department
works to complete its stages of the process before passing the new product along to
the next department and stage
Question: What steps are involved in the development of a sale promotion program?
Answer: Size of the incentive Conditions for participation Promote and distribute the
promotion program Length of the promotion Evaluation

Question: Why companies use competitive-parity method?


Answer: Companies use the competitive-parity method for setting their promotion
budgets to match competitors' outlays. They monitor competitors' advertising or get
industry promotion spending estimates from publications or trade associations, and
then set their budgets based on the industry average.
Question: What are the uses of marketing intermediaries?
Answer: The use of intermediaries results from their greater efficiency in making
goods available to target markets. Through their contacts, experience, specialization,
and scale of operation, intermediaries usually offer the firm more than it can achieve
on its own.

Question: Describe the ways of using database marketing?


Answer: 1) Identifying prospects 2) Deciding which customers should receive a
particular offer 3) Depending customer loyalty 4) Reactivating customer purchases

Question: What do we mean by franchise organization?


Answer: By franchise organization we mean a contractual vertical marketing system
in which a channel member called a franchiser links several stages in the production-
distribution process.

Question: What are the possible benefits of segmentation?


Answer: Benefits of Segmentation Identification of the target market. More
Customer focused approach Needs of customers can be better satisfied Greater
Profitability for the organization Increase in market share Best use of firm’s resources

Question: What Image comes to mind when you hear the word “Marketing”?
Answer: Marketing is a process that revolves around the customers and there
requirements. It is a process of creating value in the form of goods, services, or ideas
that can improve the customer’s life.

Question: What is TQM? Define any three characteristics of Quality.


Answer: TQM is an approach in which all the company’s people are involved in
constantly improving the quality of the products, services, and marketing processes.
a) Quality can be defined as ‘freedom from defects” b) Quality is defined in terms of
consumer satisfaction c) Quality has direct impact on product and service
performance.

Question: Briefly define the qualities of good brand name?


Answer: a) It should suggest something about the product. b) It should be easy to
pronounce. c) It should be distinctive d) It should be capable of registration and legal
protection.

Question: What are the basic goals of CRM (Customer relationship marketing)? Answer:
The idea of CRM is that it helps business use technology to gain insight into
the behavior of customer and values of those customers. If it works as hoped, a
business can: - Provide better customer services - Make call centers more efficient

Question: What is meant by De-marketing?


Answer: Marketing to reduce demand temporarily or permanently; the aim is not to
destroy demand but only to reduce or shift it.

Question: How can a manger develop a research plan?


Answer: Developing the research plan involves the following steps: 1) Determining
specific information needs 2) Gathering secondary information 3) Planning primary
data collection

Question: Write down some important uses of data-base market?


Answer: • Match profiles to cross-sell other products to customers • Modify
marketing messages based on customers profiles • Reach out to customers to reinforce
the purchase decision • Find new customers • Gain insight into who is purchasing the
product • Improve customer services

Question: Describe three major roles of public relations?


Answer: o Evaluate public attitude o Identify issues of public concern o Executes
programs to gain public acceptance

Question: List out the steps in developing effective communication


Answer:  Identify the target audience Determine the communication
objectives
Design a message Choose the media through which to send the
message 
Select the message source collect the feed back

Question: Write down the four common methods used to set the total budget for
advertising?
Answer: the affordable method  Percentage of sale method Competitive
parity method Objective and task method

Question: What are the characteristics of promotional tool?


Answer: advertising Personal selling Sales promotion Public relations
direct marketing

Question: What are the five important decisions which must take into consideration
by the marketing management, while developing an advertising program?
Answer: setting advertising objectives setting advertising budgets 
Developing advertising strategy  Message decision and media decision 
Evaluating advertising campaign

Question: What are some specific factors for advertising budget?


Answer: Stage in product life cycle (New product typically needs large advertising
budget) Market share (High market share brands usually need more advertising) 
Competition and culture (More advertising is needed in a market
with many more competitions and their advertising culture) Product differentiation

Question: What are the limitations of sales promotion?


Answer: • It can not reverse declining sales trend. • May encourage competitive
relations • Can not over come inferior product • May hurt profit
Question: What does sales people act or perform for the company?
Answer: prospecting of new business communicating with potential and
existing customer  Servicing customer and information gathering Building
Goodwill Delivering product and taking orders Executive customers and
creative selling

Question: Describe two major steps which must be taken in order to deal effectively
with competitors and their strategies?
Answer: 1. The first step is competitor analysis where the company goes through the
process of identifying, assembling, and selecting key competitor. 2. Second step
is competitive marketing strategies where the company strongly positions itself
against competitors and fins a way to give itself the greatest possible competitor
advantage.

Question: What steps/components are suggested by George Yip for the total global
strategy?
Answer: I. Development of the core strategy which is the basis of the firm’s
competitive advantage. II. Internationalization of the strategy through expansion of
activities III. Step three integrates the strategy across countries

Question: Describe role of internet in marketing?


Answer: • It is fastest growing communication technology • With in first five years,50
million people were connected • Capable of interactively sharing information in the
real time

Question: What are the rules of E-Marketing?


Answer: Power shift from sellers to buyers Global search Death of
distance Knowledge management is the key Intellectual capital rules 
Market deconstruction  Time compression

Question: Write down the traditional buyer’s rights?


Answer: • Right not to purchase a product that is offered for sale. • Right to except the
product to be safe. • Right to except the product to perform as claimed. • Right to be
well informed about important aspects of the product • Right to be protected against
questionable product. • Right to influence product and marketing practices in ways
that will improve

Question: Write down the principles of enlightened marketing?


Answer: Consumer oriented marketing Value marketing Innovative
marketing Sense of mission marketing societal marketing

Question: What are the primary criticisms of marketing functions with respect to the
impact on the individual consumer? Answer: High price Deceptive practices High
pressure selling Shoddy
or unsafe products Planned obsolescence Poor services to disadvantaged
consumer

Question: What are the cores of marketing concepts?


Answer: Needs, wants, and demand Products and services Value, satisfaction, and
quality Exchange, transaction, and relationship Market
Question: What are five alternatives concepts under which organization conduct their
marketing activities?
Answer: The production Product Selling Marketing Societal marketing concepts

Question: Describe two parts of black box?


Answer: 1. The buyer’s characteristics influence how he/she perceive and react to
stimuli. 2. the buyer’s decision process itself affects the buyer’s behavior.

Question: What is SWOT Analysis?


Answer: SWOT analysis is a tool for auditing an organization and its environment.
It is the first stage of planning and helps marketers to focus on key issues. SWOT
stands for strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, and threats

Question: What are the reasons of studying Marketing?


Answer: Marketing is part of all of our lives and touches us in some way every day.
To be successful each company that deals with customers on a daily basis must not
only be customer-driven, but customer-obsessed. The best way to achieve this
objective is to develop a sound marketing function within the organization. Major
reason to study marketing is: • Marketing plays an important role in society • It is
Vital to business • Marketing offers outstanding career opportunities • Marketing
effects your life every day

Question: Briefly define the stages involved in adoption process?


Answer: 1. Awareness. In this stage the consumer is aware of the new product but
lacks further information about it. 2. Interest. The consumer is motivated to seek
information about the new product. 3. Evaluation. The consumer determines whether
or not to try the new product. 4. Trial. The consumer tries the new product on a small
scale to test its efficacy in meeting his or her needs. Trial can be imagined use of the
product in some cases. 5. Adoption. The consumer decides to make use of the product
on a regular basis.

Question: Define Brand?


Answer: Brand: A brand is a name, sign, symbol, or design, or a combination of these
that identifies the maker or seller of a product or service.

Question: Write down major uses of the marketing research in the organizations, any
five?
Answer: Major uses of the marketing research in the organizations are as following:
1. Measurement of market potential 2. Analysis of market share 3. Determination of
market characteristics 4. Sales analysis 5. Product testing 6. Forecasting 7. Studies of
business trends 8. Studies of competitors' products.

Question: What is Demographic Segmentation? Answer: Demographic segmentation


divides the market into groups based on
variables such as age, gender, family size, family life cycle, income, occupation,
education, religion, race, and nationality.

Question: What is mission statement?


Answer: Mission statement: A mission statement is a statement of the organization’s
purposes—what it wants to accomplish in the larger environment
Question: List down the stages of buyers’ decision process?
Answer: 1. Need recognition 2. Information search 3. Evaluation of Alternatives 4.
Purchase decision 5. Post purchase behavior

Question: Who are laggards and early adopters in adoption of innovations?


Answer: Laggards: This group is suspicious of change and adopts only after the
product is no longer considered an innovation. Early Adopters: This group serves as
opinion leaders to the rest of the market.

Question: Desirable five qualities of a good brand name.


Answer: 1. It should suggest something about the product’s benefits and qualities 2.
It should be easy to pronounce, recognize, and remember. 3. It should be distinctive
4. It should translate easily into foreign languages 5. It should be capable of
registration and legal protection. Once chosen, the brand name must be protected.

Question: Write down major uses of the marketing research in the organizations, any
five?
Answer: Major uses of the marketing research in the organizations are as following:
1. Measurement of market potential 2. Analysis of market share 3. Determination of
market characteristics 4. Sales analysis 5. Product testing 6. Forecasting 7. Studies of
business trends 8. Studies of competitors' products.

Question: From which sources idea of a new product can be generated?


Answer: • Appoint a respected senior person to be the company's idea manager. •
Create a multidisciplinary idea management committee consisting of people from
R&D, engineering, purchasing, operations, finance, and sales and marketing to meet
regularly and evaluate proposed new-product and service ideas. • Set up a toll-free
number for anyone who wants to send a new idea to the idea manager. • Encourage all
company stakeholders—employees, suppliers, distributors, dealers— to send their
ideas to the idea manager. • Set up formal recognition programs to reward those who
contribute the best new ideas.

Question: What do you understand by the term diversification?


Answer: Diversification—a strategy for company growth by starting up or acquiring
businesses outside the company’s current products and markets.
Diversification means moving into totally different lines of business perhaps entirely
unfamiliar products, markets, or even levels in the production-marketing system.

Question: Define public; also explain major types of public?


Answer: A public is any group that has an actual or potential interest in or impact on
an organization’s ability to achieve its objectives. A company should prepare a
marketing plan for all of their major publics and they include: 1. financial publics--
influence the company’s ability to obtain funds. 2. Media publics--carry news, features,
and editorial opinion. 3. Government publics--take developments into
account. 4. Citizen-action publics--a company’s decisions are often questioned by
consumer organizations. 5. Local publics--includes neighborhood residents and
community organizations. 6. General publics--a company must be concerned about
the general public’s attitude toward its products and services. 7. Internal publics--
workers, managers, volunteers, and the board of directors.

Question: What image come to mind when you hear the word Marketing
Answer: Some people think of advertisements or brochures, while others think of
public relations. The truth is, all of these—and many more things—make up the field
of marketing. The Knowledge Exchange Business Encyclopedia defines marketing as
“planning and executing the strategy involved in moving a good or service from
producer to consumer.” In simplified terms, marketers and others help move goods
and services through the creation and production process; at that point, marketers help
move the goods and services to consumers. But the connection goes even further:
Marketing can have a significant impact on all areas of the business and vice versa.

Question: What is meant by Price .What factors should be considered while setting
price.
Answer: All profit and nonprofit organizations must set prices on their products and
services. Price goes by many names (rent, tuition, fee, fare, rate, interest, toll,
premium, et cetera). Price is the amount of money charged for a product or service or
the sum of the values that consumers exchange for the benefits of having or using the
product or service. A company's pricing decisions are affected by both internal
company factors and external environmental factors a) Internal Factors Affecting
Pricing Decision Internal factors affecting pricing include the company's marketing
objectives, marketing mix strategy, costs, and organizational considerations. b)
External Factors Affecting Pricing Decisions External factors that affect pricing
decisions include the nature of the market and demand, competition, and other
environmental elements.

Question: Why to conduct business research


Answer: Marketing Research is a Systematic & objective process of designing,
gathering, analyzing & reporting information that is used to solve a specific problem.
It Provides information for aid in making business related decisions, to
Identify opportunities and generate & refine actions. It is important for the mangers
for many decisions like: • Helps reduce risk inherent in decision-making • Provides an
important link to customers • Allows implementation of the business concept •
Enables managers to identify & understand stakeholders wants & needs and to
develop appropriate strategies to meet these needs

Question: Write down the Porter’s 5 Forces Model of Competition.


Answer: • Threat of New Entrants Ratio of new entrants in the industry greater the
ratio greater will be intensity of competition. • Bargaining Power of Buyers: When
completion is intense and number of manufacturer is greater the buyer have more
options for product switching over this will increase the buying power of buyer •
Threat of Substitute: As obvious from the term greater the threat of new entrants will
result in greater higher completion that in tern will result in increase in the number of
substitutes • Bargaining Power of Suppliers: Greater number of the supplier will
provide the stronger buying power to the manufacturer/customer and vice versa • Rivalry
Among Competing Firms in Industry: Larger number of the manufacturers
and greater number of product variety increases the rivalry among the competitors,
which demands for more quality and customer satisfy9ng products in order to meet
the competition.

Question: What is the classification of Advertising Objectives by primary purpose


Answer: 1). Informative advertising, which is used to inform consumers about a new
product 2). Persuasive advertising which is used to build selective demand for a brand
by persuading consumers that it offers the best quality for their money. 3).
Comparison advertising which is advertising that compares one brand directly or
indirectly to one or more other brands. 4). Reminder advertising, which is used to
keep consumers thinking about a product. This form of advertising is more important
for mature products.

Question: What is the classification of consumer products


Answer: • Convenience products the customer usually buys frequently, immediately,
and with a minimum of comparison and buying effort. Examples include soap, candy,
newspapers, and fast food. • Comparison products are less frequently purchased
products and services that customers compare carefully on suitability, quality, price,
and style. Examples include furniture, clothing, used cars, major appliances, and hotel
and motel services. • Shopping products marketers usually distribute their products
through fewer outlets but provide deeper sales support to help customers in their
comparison efforts. • Specialty products are consumer products and services with
unique characteristics for which a significant group of buyers is willing to make a
special purchase effort. Examples include specific brands and types of cars, designer
clothes, and the services of medical or legal specialists.
• Unsought products are consumer products that the consumer either does not know
about or knows about but does not normally think of buying. Classic examples of
known but unsought products and services are life insurance and blood donations to
the Red Cross.
1. B2C (business-to-consumer) e-commerce: The online selling of goods and services
to final consumers.

2. Benchmarking: The process of comparing the company’s products and processes to


those of competitors or leading firms in other industries to find ways to improve
quality and performance

3. Business buyer behavior: The buying behavior of the organizations that buy goods
and services for use in the production of other products and services or for the
purpose of reselling or renting them to others at a profit

4. Business buying process: The decision process by which business buyers determine
which products and services their organizations need to purchase, and then find,
evaluate, and choose among alternative suppliers and brands

5. Buzz marketing: Cultivating opinion leaders and getting them to spread information
about a product or service to others in their communities

6. Catalog marketing: Direct marketing through print, video, or electronic catalogs


that are mailed to select customers, made available in stores, or presented online
7. Click-and-mortar companies: Traditional brick-and-mortar companies that have
added e-marketing to their operations

8. Cognitive dissonance: Buyer discomfort caused by post purchase conflict


9. Concentrated (niche) marketing: A market- coverage strategy in which a firm goes
after a large share of one or a few segments or niches

10. Contractual VMS: A vertical marketing system in which independent firms at


different levels of production and distribution join together through contracts to obtain
more economies or sales impact than they could achieve alone

11. Corporate VMS: A vertical marketing system that combines successive stages of
production and distribution under single ownership-channel leadership is established
through common ownership

12. Customer relationship management (CRM): The overall process of building and
maintaining profitable customer relationships by delivering superior customer value
and satisfaction

13. Cost-plus pricing: Adding a standard markup to the cost of the product

14. Differentiated (segmented) marketing: A market-coverage strategy in which a


firm decides to target several market segments and designs separate offers for each

15. Direct-response television marketing: Direct marketing via television, including


direct-response television advertising or infomercials and home shopping channels

16. Dissonance-reducing buying behavior: Consumer buying behavior in situations


characterized by high involvement but few perceived differences among brands.

17. Diversification: A strategy for company growth through starting up or acquiring


businesses outside the company’s current

18. Downsizing: Reducing the business portfolio by eliminating products or business


units that are not profitable or that no longer fit the company’s overall strategy

19. E-marketing: The marketing sides of ecommerce- company efforts to


communicate about, promotes, and sell products and services over the Internet.

20. Embargo: A ban on the import of a certain product.

21. Experience curve (learning curve) : The drop in the average per-unit production
cost that comes with accumulated production experience

22. Exclusive distribution: Giving a limited number of dealers the exclusive right to
distribute the company’s products in their territories.
23. Experimental research: The gathering of primary data by selecting matched
groups of subjects, giving them different treatments, controlling related factors, and
checking for differences in group responses

24. FOB-origin pricing: A geographical pricing strategy in which goods are placed
free on board a carrier; the customer pays the freight from the factory to the
destination.
25. Franchise: A contractual association between a manufacturer, wholesaler, or
service organization (a franchiser) and independent businesspeople (franchisees) who
buy the right to own and operate one or more units in the franchise system

26. Freight-absorption pricing: A geographical pricing strategy in which the seller


absorbs all or part of the freight charges in order to get the desired business.

27. Gatekeepers: People in the organization’s buying center that control the flow of
information to others.

28. Generation X: The 45 million people born between 1965 and 1976 in the “Birth
dearth” following the baby boom.

29. Global firm: A firm that, by operating in more than one country, gains R&D,
production, marketing, and financial advantages in its costs and reputation that are not
available to purely domestic competitors.

30. Growth-share matrix: A portfolio-planning method that evaluates a company’s


strategic business units in terms of their market growth rate and relative market share.
SBUs are classified as stars, cash cows, question marks, or dogs.

31. Innovative marketing: A principle of enlightened marketing that requires that a


company seek real product and marketing improvements.
32. Integrated marketing communications (IMC): The concept under which a
company carefully integrates and coordinates its many communications channels to
deliver a clear, consistent, and compelling message about the organization and its
products.

33. Integrated logistics management: The logistics concept that emphasizes


teamwork, both inside the company and among all the marketing channel
organizations, to maximize the performance of the entire distribution system.

34. Integrated direct marketing: Direct marketing campaigns that use multiple
vehicles and multiple stages to improve response rates and profits.

35. Interactive marketing: Marketing by a service firm that recognizes that perceived
service quality depends heavily on the quality of buyer-seller interaction.

36. Internet: A vast public web of computer networks, which connects users of all
types all around the world to each other and to an amazingly large information
repository.
37. Management contracting: A joint venture in which the domestic firm supplies the
management know-how to a foreign company that supplies the capital; the domestic
firm exports management services rather than products.

38. Marketing communications mix (promotion mix): The specific mix of advertising,
personal selling, sales promotion, and public relations a company uses.

39. Marketing information system (MIS): People, equipment, and procedures to


gather, sort, analyze, evaluate, and distribute needed, timely, and accurate information
to marketing decision makers.

40. Engel’s laws: Differences noted over a century ago by Ernst Engel in how people
shift their spending across food, housing, transportation, health care, and other goods
and services categories as family income rises.

41. Generation Y: The 72 million children of the baby boomers, born between1977
and 1994.

42. Viral marketing: The Internet version of word-of-mouth marketing-e-mail


messages or other marketing events that is so infectious that customers will want to
pass them along to friends
43. Sense-of-mission marketing: A principle of enlightened marketing that holds that
a company should define its mission in broad social terms rather than narrow product
terms.
44. Adapted marketing mix: An international marketing strategy for adjusting the
marketing mix elements to each international target market, bearing more costs but
hoping for a larger market share and return
45. Adoption process: The mental process through which an individual passes from
first hearing about an innovation to final adoption
46. Agent: A wholesaler who represents buyers or sellers on a relatively permanent
basis, performs only a few functions, and does not take title to goods
47. B2B (business-to-business) e-commerce: Using B2B trading networks, auction
sites, spot exchanges, online product catalogs, barter sites, and other online resources
to reach new customers, serve current customers more effectively, and obtain buying
efficiencies and better prices
48. C2B (consumer-to-business) e-commerce: Online exchanges in which consumers
search out sellers, learn about their offers, and initiate purchases, sometimes even
driving transaction terms
49. Administered VMS: A vertical marketing system that coordinates successive
stages of production and distribution, not through common ownership or contractual
ties, but through the size and power of one of the parties
50. C2C (consumer-to-consumer) e-commerce: Online exchanges of goods and
information between final consumers
51. Market-penetration pricing: Setting a low price for a new product in order to
attract a large number of buyers and a large market share.
52. Market-skimming pricing: Setting a high price for a new product to skim
maximum revenues layer by layer from the segments willing to pay the high price; the
company makes fewer but more profitable sales. 53. Multichannel distribution system (or
hybrid market: A distribution system in
which a single firm sets up two or more marketing channels to reach one or more
customer segments.
54. No personal communication channels: Media that carry messages without
personal contact or feedback, including major media, atmospheres, and events.
55. Objective-and-task method: Developing the promotion budget by (1) defining
specific objectives; (2) determining the tasks that must be performed to achieve these
objectives; and (3) estimating the costs of performing these tasks. The sum of these
costs is the proposed promotion budget.
56. Opinion leader: Person within a reference group who, because of special skills,
knowledge, personality, or other characteristics, exerts influence on others.
57. Partner relationship management: Working closely with partners in other
company departments and outside the company to jointly bring greater value to
customers.
58. Point-of-purchase (POP) promotion: Display and demonstration that takes place at
the point of purchase or sale.
59. Price elasticity: A measure of the sensitivity of demand to changes in price.
60. Product life cycle (PLC): The course of a product’s sales and profits over its
lifetime. It involves five distinct stages: product development, introduction, growth,
maturity, and decline.
61. Product/market expansion grid: A portfolio-planning tool for identifying company
growth opportunities through market penetration, market development, product
development, or diversification.
62. Pull strategy: A promotion strategy that calls for spending a lot on advertising and
consumer promotion to build up consumer demand. If the strategy is successful,
consumers will ask their retailers for the product, the retailers will ask the
wholesalers, and the wholesalers will ask the producers.
63. Return on marketing (or marketing ROI): The net return from a marketing
investment divided by the costs of the marketing investment.
64. Salutary products: Products that have low appeal but may benefit consumers in the
long run.
65. Sequential product development: A new-product development approach in which
one company department works to complete its stage of the process before passing the
new product along to the next department and stage.
66. Service inseparability: A major characteristic of services—they are produced and
consumed at the same time and cannot be separated from their providers.
67. Service intangibility: A major characteristic of services—they cannot be seen,
tasted, felt, heard, or smelled before they are bought.
68. Service perishes ability: A major characteristic of services—they cannot be stored
for later sale or use.
69. Service variability: A major characteristic of services—their quality may vary
greatly, depending on who provides them and when, where, and how.
70. Simultaneous (or team-based) product development: An approach to developing
new products in which various company departments work closely together,
overlapping the steps in the product development process to save time and increase
effectiveness.
71. Societal marketing concept: A principle of enlightened marketing that holds that a
company should make good marketing decisions by considering consumers’ wants,
the company’s requirements, consumers’ long-run interests, and society’s long run
interests. 72. Third-party logistics (3PL) provider: An independent logistics provider that
performs any or all of the functions required to get its client’s product to market.
73. Telephone marketing: Using the telephone to sell directly to customers.
74. Undifferentiated (mass) marketing: A market-coverage strategy in which a firm
decides to ignore market segment differences and go after the whole market with one
offer.
75. Vertical marketing system (VMS) : A distribution channel structure in which
producers, wholesalers, and retailers act as a unified system. One channel member
owns the others, has contracts with them, or has so much power that they all
cooperate.
76. Wheel-of-retailing concept: A concept of retailing that states that new types of
get buyers and neighbors, friends, family members, and associates.
77. Value-based pricing : Setting price based on buyers’ perceptions of value rather
than on the seller’s cost.
78. Unsought product : Consumer product that the consumer either does not know
about or knows about but does not normally think of buying.
79. Technological environment : Forces that create new technologies, creating new
product and market opportunities.
80. Supply chain management : Managing upstream and downstream value-added
flows of materials, final goods, and related information among suppliers, the
company, resellers, and final consumers.
81. Standardized marketing mix : An international marketing strategy for
using basically the same product, advertising, distribution channels, and other
elements of the marketing mix in all the company’s international markets.
82. Portfolio analysis : The process by which management evaluates the products
and businesses making up the company.
83. Broker : A wholesaler who does not take title to goods and whose function
is to bring buyers and sellers together and assist in negotiation.
84. Allowance : Promotional money paid by manufacturers to retailers in return for
an agreement to feature the manufacturer’s products in some way.
85. access : Access to library materials and services, on one dimension, is
represented in the location of physical facilities. Because libraries are travelled-to
outlets, marketing location theories can be applied successfully to library siting.
(Wood and Koontz)
86. accountability : Libraries like private sector businesses are increasingly
called upon to make all units accountable for results. Growing funds are needed
for technology as opposed to only books. Funders often cut the library budget
first, in favor of other agencies such as police and fire or other seemingly, more
necessary agencies. Libraries are developing better performance measures within
the present day control systems to offer better accountability. (Wood and Koontz
87. acculturation : The process by which people in one culture or subculture learn to
understand and adapt to the norms, values, life styles and behaviors of people in
another culture or subcultures. For example, acculturation is the process by which
a recent immigrant learns the way of life of the new country. Library services and
materials facilitate this process.
88. acquisition value : The users' perception of the relative worth of a product or
service to them. Formally defined as the subjectively weighted difference between
the most a buyer would be willing to pay for the product or service, less the actual
price of the item. Time user must spend to 'acquire' is often used as a surrogate for
'relative worth or price paid,' in library research. For example, a user might be willing to
expend drive time and a brief time in the library to check out a best
seller, but not wait two weeks for a copy to be returned.
89. activities, interests, and opinions (AIO) : A measurable series of
psychographic (as opposed to demographic) variables involving the interests and
beliefs of users. Note, because psychographics are usually expensive to gather, yet
offer a more precise profile of users, demographic variables are usually relied
upon.
90. adopter categories : Persons or agencies that adopt an innovation are often
classified into five groups according to the sequence of their adoption of it. (To
illustrate this think of individual use of the Internet within the library, and for an
agency, libraries that offer Internet access to the general public. 1) Innovators
(first 2-5%); 2) Early adopters (10-15%)' 3) Early majority (next 35%); 4) Late
majority (next 35%); 5) Laggards (final 5-10%). This is important when
considering how long it may take for the general public to 'adopt' a product or
service.
91. advertising : The placement and purchase of announcements and persuasive
messages in time or space in any of the mass media by business firms, nonprofit
organizations. This has not been a traditional method of informing the public,
rather public service announcements, which are placed at no cost, are the norm for
libraries.
92. aggregation : A concept of market segmentation that assumes that most
consumers are alike. A library of the past had an 'opening day' collection of
materials, that could be found in most towns and cities. Today's libraries are more
aware of considering the unique needs of individuals in the market area.
93. aging : The length of time merchandise has been in stock. For the library this
could be of benefit by gaining knowledge about the duration of certain goods.
94. all-you-can-afford budgeting : An approach to the advertising budget that
establishes the amount to be spent on advertising as the funds remaining after all
other necessary expenditures and investments are covered. Libraries often relegate
all promotion related materials and services into this category.
95. ambiance : An overall feeling or mood projected by a store through its
aesthetic appeal to human senses. A brightly colored children's room is more
appealing to juveniles than an area sectioned off within the adult room which
blends in.
96. analysis : In marketing and other social science disciplines, a variety of
statistical and nonstatiscal methods are used to analyze data, instead of sheer
intuition, or simple descriptive statistics-- which have been the norm in the library
filed. (Wood and Koontz)
97. broadcast television : A method of distributing television signals by means of
stations that broadcast signals over channels assigned to specific geographic
areas.
98. circulation : The number of copies of a print advertising medium that are
distributed. For the library field, this is numbers of items checked out by users.
99. classic merchandise : The merchandise that is not influenced by style changes for
which a demand virtually always exists. For the library this might be print
encyclopedias, indexes, classical literary works.
100. consumer behavior : The behavior of the consumer or decision maker in
the market place of products and services. Library user behavior is often captured
in library literature under use studies.
101. contingency planning : Developing plans to provide alternative plans to the main
plan. This is proactive management that deals with events
considered unlikely to occur. For example, while a library budget may appear to
be adequate and stabile, a contingency plan should be in place in case of cutbacks
in funding. customer
102. copyright : A copyright offers the owner of original work that can be
printed, recorded or "fixed" in any manner the sole right to reproduce and
distribute the work, to display or perform it and to authorize other to do so.,
during the author's lifetime and for fifty years thereafter.
103. factor analysis : A body of statistical techniques concerned with
study of interrelationships among a certain set of variables--none of which is
given the special status of a criterion variable.
104. family : A group of at least two people in a household based on
marriage, cohabitation, blook relationships or adoption.
105. family decision making : The processes, interactions, and roles of
family members involved in making decisions as a group.
106. family life cycle : A sociological concept that describes changes in
families across time, emphasizing effects of marriage, divorce, births and deaths
on families and changes in income.
107. feature : The use of advertising, displays, or other activity, generally
by a retailer, to call special attention to a product, generally for a limited period of
time.
108. feature story : A type of publicity material that can be used by the media
at their convenience because it is not time-related. Library materials and services
available are good candidates for this type of story.
109. fill rate : An inventory's availability goal used when setting customer
service objectives, for example 80 out of 100 reference questions were answered
in a workday.
110. flagship store : In a local department store organization/library
system, the main or central store/library when it is large or dominant in relation to
other company stores.
111. focus group : A method of gathering quantitative data on the preferences
and beliefs of consumers through group interaction and discussion usually
focused on a specific topic or product.
112. forecasting models : In forecasting sales, or library use, or other
objectives, a variety of statistical models are used and available, offering insights
otherwise difficult to obtain.
113. galley proof : A copy of the individual pages of an ad, brochure, poster or
other printed material used for final proofreading of the text before final negatives
are made for the printing process.
114. gatekeeper : Usually the individual who controls the flow of information
from the mass media to the group or individual.
115. geodemography : The availability of demographic consumer behavior
and life style data by arbitrary geographic boundaries that are typically quite
small. For example, a library-designated service area of two census tracts (US).
116. goals : A concrete point of measurement that the business unit/library
intends to meet to achieve objectives. For example, the library's goal is to improve
reference services, its objectives include increasing fill rate by 20% in two
months.
117. gravity model : A theory about the structure of market areas. The
model states that the volume of purchases by consumers/users the frequency of trips to
the outlets are a function of the size of the stores/library and the distance
between the store and the origin of the shopping trip.
118. growth state of product life cycle : Second stage during which sales/use
are increasing
119. habit : A learned response to a stimulus that has become automatic and
routine, requiring little or no cognitive effort. It is often said that the reading and
library habit if not learned as a child, will not be learned as an adult.
120. halo effect : A problem that arises in data collection when there is carry
over from one judgement to another.
121. high income countries : Countries whose income per capita are high
compared to the rest of the world.
122. image : The sum of beliefs, ideas and impressions that a person has
of an object or agency. (Assael). For example, the library holds an image of
prestige for some communities.
123. income differential : The difference in income levels among people of
various categories, such as different jobs, geographic areas, age classes, sexes,
races and the like.
124. industrialized country : Characteristics: 1) degree of urbanization
increases, literacy levels are high, exceeding 85%, population engaged in
agriculture drops substantially; 2) wage levels rise sharply and ownership of
durables; 3) need for labor saving methods creates new industries.
125. life style : The manner in which people conduct their lives, including
their activities, opinions, and interests (AIO).
126. literature search : A search of statistics, trade journal articles and
other media for data or insight into the problems at hand. Special libraries often
provide customized searches for a fee.
127. low income countries : Countries with the lowest income per capita
compared with the rest of the world. The bottom quartile is often considered low
income.
128. macroenvironment : The conditions facing a company/library including
demographic economic, natural, technological, political, and cultural forces.
129. market : The set of actual of potential users/customers. (Kotler)
130. market area : A geographical area containing the customers/users of a
particular firm/library for specific goods or services. (The library's legal service
area.)
131. market development : Expanding the total market served by 1) entering
new segments, 2) converting nonusers, 3) increasing use by present users.
132. market positioning : Positioning refers to the user's perceptions of the
place a product or brand occupies in a market segment. Or how the
company/library's offering is differentiated from the competition's.
133. market profile : A breakdown of a facility's market area according
to income, demography, and life style (often.)
134. market research : The systematic gathering, recording and analyzing
of data with respect to a particular market, where market refers to a specific user
group in a specific geographic area.
135. market segmentation : The process of subdividing a market into
distinct subsets of users that behave in the same way or have similar needs.
Segments for the library could be demographic (Asian); geographic (branchlevel);
psychographics (leisure-oriented); customer size (largest user group area);
benefits (have children in the home learning to read.) 136. market share : A proportion of
the total sales/use in a market obtained by a
given facility or chain.
137. marketing : The process of planning and executing the conception,
pricing, promotion, and distribution of ideas, goods, and services to create
exchanges that satisfy individual and organizational goals.
138. balanced stock : The composition of merchandise inventory in the
colors, sizes, styles and other assortment characteristics that will satisfy user
wants. For the library this would mean, services and materials based upon users
wants and needs.
139. barcode : An information technology application that uniquely
identifies various aspects of product characteristics, increasing speed, accuracy,
and productivity of distribution process. Most library materials are barcoded for
security.
140. benefit segmentation : The process of grouping users into market
segments on the basis of the desirable consequences sought from the product. For
example, the library market for children's books, may include children and parents
who are benefiting by developing the library and reading habit, and or recent
immigrants who benefit from learning the language of the new country. Each is
receiving a benefit from the product or service.
141. body language : The nonverbal signals communicated in interactions
through facial expressions, arms, legs and hands--or nonverbal communication.
This can be positive ( a smile) or negative (a frown.)
142. brand : A name, term, design, symbol, or any other feature that
identifies one seller's good or service as distinct from those of other sellers. The
legal term for brand is trademark. A brand may identify one item, a family of
items, or all items of that seller. If used for the firm as a whole, the preferred term
is trade name. Library could be considered a trade name.
143. budget : The detailed financial component of the strategic plan that
guides the allocation of resources and provides a mechanism for identifying
deviations of actual from desired performance so corrective action can be taken.
A budget assigns a dollar figure to each revenue and expense related activity. A
budget is usually prepared for a period of one year by each component of an
organization. A budget provides both a guide for action and a means of assessing
performance. A budget is a library's post control system.
144. bureaucratic organization : Official decision making is circumscribed
by laws, rules, and regulations which often result in inflexibility, "red tape" and
slowness to act. A hierarchical business structure, unlike business that operates in
a competitive environment that does not reward slow decision making if it results
in poor sales or customer service. Library's are often linked to large bureaucracies,
government or schools and universities.
145. cable television : A method of distributing television signals by
means of coaxial or fiber-optic cables. Some libraries have programs on public
access channels.
146. census : A complete canvass of a population.
147. census block : Usually a well-defined rectangular area bounded by streets
or roads. It may be irregular in shape and may be bounded by physical features
such as railroads or streams. Census block do not cross boundaries of countries,
tracts, or block numbering areas.
148. census tract : A small, relatively permanent area (US) into which
metropolitan statistical areas (MSAs) and certain other area are divided for the purpose of
providing statistics for small areas. When census tracts are established
they are designed to be homogeneous with respect to population characteristics,
economic status and living conditions. Census tracts generally have between
2,500 and 8,000 residents.
149. chain store system : A groups of retail stores of essentially the same
type, centrally owned and with some degree of centralized control of operation.
This would be similar to the public library's system of branches.
150. channel of distribution : An organized network of agencies and
institutions which in combination perform all the functions required to link
producers with end customers to accomplish the marketing task. For a library this
would include vendors, publishers as well as library facilities.
151. clustering : A statistical method of forming natural groupings in which
a number of important characteristics of a large diverse group are identified in
order to define target markets. For a library such a cluster might include higher
education levels, and income. (Wood and Koontz)
152. community analysis : For a public library this is a market research
exercise reviewing library statistics, population served characteristics, users and
other stakeholders in the library characteristics to better profile the library's
market area. (Wood and Koontz)
153. community relations : The library's interactions with the locality in
which it operates, with emphasis on disseminating library-related information to
foster trust in the library or information organization's activities.
154. competition : The rivalry among sellers trying to achieve such goals as
increasing profits, market share and sales volume by varying the elements of the
marketing mix: price, product, distribution and promotion. The agency changes to
better meet consumer wants and needs. For a library competition may be
bookstores, community events, video stores or even other libraries.
155. consumer : The ultimate user of goods, ideas or services. Also the
buyer or decision maker, for example, the parent selecting children's books is the
consumer.
156. consumer characteristics : The demographic, lifestyle and personality
characteristics of the consumer. For a library this would be the user.
157. consumer satisfaction : The degree to which a consumer's
expectations are fulfilled or surpassed by a product. User satisfaction with library
services and materials is often difficult to determine because: 1) there is no clear
ring of the cash register at the end of the day; 2) privacy issues concerning use of
library materials and services usually deter marketing-type exit interviews; 3) and
little research is conducted in this area due to lack of expertise.
158. convenience sample : A nonprobability sample of individuals who just
happen to be where the study is being conducted when it is being conducted. For
example, a library could interview people exiting the library asking, 'Were you
satisfied with the materials and services, if not why?'
159. core product : The central benefit or purpose for which a consumer buys a
product or service. The core product varies from purchaser to purchaser. For a
library user the core benefit of checking out a book, may be for one user that there
is no charge, and to another the availability of a work which can no longer be
purchased.
160. correlation analysis : A statistical technique used to measure the
closeness of the linear relationship between two or more intervally scaled
variables. For example public library use has a close linear relationship with people of
higher education and income.
161. customer : The actual or prospective purchaser of products or services.
The library user is the library's
162. marketing channel : A set of institutions necessary to transfer the title to
goods and to move goods from the point of consumption. (Vendors, publishers,
library facilities.)
163. marketing mix : The mix of controllable variables that the
firm/library uses to reach desired use/sales level in target market, including price,
product, place and promotion- 4 P's.
164. marketing opportunity : An attractive arena of relevant marketing
action in which a particular organization is likely to enjoy a superior and
competitive advantage. (Kotler) marketing plan A document composed of an
analysis of the current marketing situation, opportunities and threats, analysis,
marketing objectives, marketing strategy, action programs, and projected income
statement
165. maturity stage of product life cycle : Initial rapid growth is over and
use/sales level off. microenvironment The set of forces close to an organization
that have direct impact on its ability to serve its customers, including channel
member organizations, competitors, user markets, publics and the capabilities of
the organization.
166. mission statement : An expression of a company's/library's history,
managerial preferences, environmental concerns, resources, and competencies. It
is used to guide the company's decion making process, answering what is our
business, who do we serve, etc.
167. mores : The cultural norms that specify behavior of vital
importance to society and embody its basic moral values.
168. motivation : The positive or negative needs, goals, desires and forces
that impel an individual toward or away from certain actions, activities, objects or
conditions. The inner needs and wants of an individual--what affects behavior.
169. multiple purpose trip : A key concept in central place theory that
argues consumers prefer to visit more than one store per trip, generating positive
externalities for neighboring stores. This view has mixed reviews in the library
field.
170. newsletter : A brief digest of important or noteworthy information. A
method of reaching various publics quickly--e.g., the friends of the library
newsletter.
171. nominal scale : A measurement scale in which numbers are
assigned to attributes of objects or classes of objects solely for the purpose of
identifying the objects.
172. nonprobability sample : A sample that relies on personal judgment
somewhere in the element selection process.
173. nonprofit marketing : The marketing of a product or service in which the
offer itself is not intended to make a monetary profit for the marketer.
174. norms : The rules of behavior that are part of the ideology of the
group. Norms tend to reflect the values of the group and specify those actions that
are proper and those that are inappropriate, as well as rewards for adherence and
the punishment for conformity. Norms are important for librarians to understand
when serving culturally diverse markets.
175. objectives : The desired or needed result to be achieved by a specific
time. An objective is broader than a goal, and one objective can be broken down into a
number of specific goals.
176. observation : A method of data collection in which the situation of
interest is watched and the relevant facts, actions and behaviors are recorded. This
is a important area of library use which is usually uncounted--what people are
actually doing in the library e.g., browsing, using the computer, reading to a child,
etc.
177. opinion : A belief or emotionally neutral cognition the individual
holds about some aspect or object in the environment.
178. ordinal scale : A measurement in which numbers are assigned to attributes
of objects of classes of objects to reflect the order.
179. output evaluation : An objective measure of use performance, such as
circulation per capita of a library population, reference transactions per capita, etc.
180. positioning : (see product positioning)
181. preindustrialized country : Characteristics: 1) Low literacy rates and
high perecentage of employment in agriculture; 2) low population density and low
degree of urbanization; 3) linguistic heterogeneity and a small percentage of
working age population; 4) industrial sectors nonexistent and undeveloped; 5)
heavy reliance on foreign sources for all manufacturers and principal engagement
in agricultural endeavors.
182. private sector : Activities outside the public sector that are
independent of government control, usually, but not always carried on for a profit.
183. product : A bundle of attributes or features, functions, benefits and
uses capable of exchange, usually in tangible or intangible forms. The library's
products include materials to use, questions answered, storyhours, online
searching, etc.
184. publics : The groups of people that have an actual or possible
interest in or impact on the company's efforts to achieve its goals.
185. reach : The number of people or households exposed to a particular
advertising media or media schedule during a specified time.
186. respondent : A person who is asked for information using either written
or verbal questioning, typically employing a questionnaire to guide the
questioning.
187. salary : Compensation paid periodically to a person independent of
performance (in sales or levels of use stimulated.)
188. sample : The selection of a subset of elements from a larger group of
objects.
189. sample survey : A cross sectional study in which the sample is
selected to be representative of the target population and in which the emphasis is
on the generation of summary statistics such as averages and percentages.
190. scanner : An electronic device that automatically reads imprinted
codes, as the product is pulled across the scanner. The library field is successfully
using these for circulation and other use counts.
191. segmentation : (see market segmentation)
192. self-concept : The ideas, attitudes, and perceptions people have about
themselves.
193. self service : The type of operation in which the customer/user is
exposed to merchandise (browsing and self-selection) without assistance, unless
customer/user seeks assistance.
194. selling orientation (Wood) : A company-centered rather than a clientcentered
approach to conduct of business. This orientation tends to ignore what the customer/user
really wants and needs.
195. service(s) : Products such as a bank loan or home security or library
loans, that are intangible or at least substantially so.
196. shopping good : Goods and products can be classified as
convenience, shopping or specialty. A shopping good is one that more time is
spent selecting (browsing) than a quick convenience good. Example, a certain
type of mystery book.
197. situation analysis (SWOT) : An examination of the internal factors of a
library to identify strengths and weaknesses, and the external environment to
identify opportunities and threats.
198. slogan : The verbal or written portion of an advertising message that
summarizes themain idea in a few memorable words--a tag line.
199. social advertising : The advertising designed to education or motivate
target audiences to undertake socially desirable actions.
200. social class : A status hierarchy by which groups and individuals are
classified on the basis of esteem and prestige.
201. social indicator : The data and information that facilitate the
evaluation of how well a society or institution is doing.
202. specialty advertising : The placement of advertising messages on a
wide variety of items of interest to the target markets such as calendars, coffee
cups, pens, hats, note paper, t-shirts, etc. These are widely given out to librarians
at professional conferences from vendors. Libraries may use these items as well,
but are usually sold in library gift shops.
203. specialty good : A specialty good is one that users/consumers will
spend more time searching for, and time travelling to and pay higher for. A library
specialty good could be a certain online service or special collection of materials.
204. stakeholder : One of a group of publics with which a company must be
concerned. Key stakeholders for a library could be users, employees, board
members, vendors or other who have a relationship with the library.
205. store layout : The interior layout of the store/library for the ease of user
movement through the store to provide maximum exposure of good and attractive
display. Retail store layout, is also successfully applicable to library layout.
206. strategic market planning : The planning process that yields decisions in
how a business unit can best compete in the markets it elects to serve. The
strategic plan is based upon the totality of the marketing process.
207. subculture : The segments within a culture that share distinguishing
meanings, values, and patterns of behavior that differ from those of the overall
culture. These subcultures are important to recognize in library communities that
may serve a disproportionate number, whose information needs may be
nontraditional and unique.
208. subliminal perception : A psychological view that suggests that
attitudes and behaviors can be changed by stimuli that are not consciously
perceived.
209. workroom : A service department such as apparel alterations, drapery
manufacture, library materials processing.
210. young single stage : (see family life cycle)
211. ZIP code : A geographical classification system developed by the U.S.
government for mail distribution, a nested numeric range of 5 to 9 numbers.
212. wants : The wishes, needs, cravings, demands or desires of human
beings. 213. will-call : The products ordered by customers/users in advance of the
time delivery desired. Books on reserve.
214. word of mouth communication(WOM) : This occurs when people
share information about products or promotions with friends--research indicate
WOM is more likely to be negative.
215. VALS (values and lifestyles) : An acronym standing for values and
life styles. VALS is a psychographic segmentation approach developed at
Stanford Research Institute International. This data is useful to public and private
sector. Unfortunately, the data is still largely expensive, therefore, libraries and
other non-profits still widely rely on demographics.
216. value : The power of any good to command other goods in peaceful and
voluntary exchange.
217. values : The beliefs about the important life goals that consumers
are trying to achieve. The important enduring ideals or beliefs that guide behavior
within a culture or for a specific person.
218. variety : The number of different classifications of goods carried in
a particular merchandising unit. How many different children's authors are
represented in the juvenile collection?
219. culture : The set of learned values, norms, and behaviors that are
shared by a society and are designed to increase the probability of the society's
survival. These include shared superstitions, myths, folkways, mores and behavior
patterns that are rewarded or punished. For libraries, the understanding of
different cultures, as new immigrant groups move into the market area is
extremely important to take into consideration, in order to provide the needed
materials and services.
220. demarketing : The process of reducing the demand for a product--or
decreasing consumption.
221. display : A special exhibit of a product or service at the point of sale,
generally over and above standard shelf stocking. Simply books place on display
over specific subject areas.
222. dwell time : The amount of time a customer/user spends in time waiting
in line. For a library user this is a price expended.
223. eighty-twenty principle : The situation in which a disproportionately
small number (e.g., 20%) of staff, products or users generate a disproportionately
large amount (e.g., 80%) of a firm's use/profits. A use analysis should be
conducted to determine what the cause is.
224. elasticity : The degree that an economic variable changes in response
to a change in another economic variable. For example how much library use
changes according to how far an individual must travel for library services.
225. environment, external : The complex set of physical and social
stimuli in the external world of consumers.
226. environmental analysis : Gathering data regarding political, cultural,
social, demographic, economic, legal, international and ecological forces ,
identifying trends affecting agency.
227. environmental monitoring : Keeping track of a changes in the
environment.
228. evoked set : A set of alternatives that are activated directly from
memory--certain brands considered during the buying process.
229. exchange : All activities associated with receiving something from
someone by giving something voluntarily in return. This is the heart of the marketing
process. A library user gives time instead of money to borrow
materials, but it is still an exchange.
230. exhibit : The gathering and displaying of products, people, or
information at a central location for viewing by a diverse audience. Most libraries
have exhibits created by staff, community or other stakeholders.
231. experience survey : A series of interviews with people knowledgeable
about the general subject being investigated.
232. external data : Data that originate outside the organization for which
research is being done.
233. reference group : A group that the individual tends to use as the
anchor point for evaluating his/her own beliefs and attitudes. Teenagers influence
their peers regarding library use.
234. target market identification : The process of using income, demographic,
and life style characteristics of a market and census information for small areas to
identify the most favorable locations.
235. attitudes : Enduring systems of positive or negative evaluations,
emotional feelings, and action tendencies with respect to an object. Consumer's
overall liking or preference for an object. (Assael)
236. atmospherics : The physical characteristics of the library such as
architecture, layout, signs and displays, color, lighting, temperature, access, noise,
assortment, prices, special events, etc., that serve as stimuli and attention
attractors of users to the library or information agency.
237. audience : The number and/or characteristics of the persons or
households who are exposed to a particular type of advertising media or media
vehicle. In a library this could be a certain number of people that attend a library
program.
238. audit : The process of reviewing the library's strengths and weaknesses
(internally), and opportunities and threats (externally) to shed light on the
agency's performance.
239. convenience product : A consumer good and/or service (such as
soap, candy bar, and shoe shine) that is bought frequently, often on impulse, with
little time effort spent on the buying process. A convenience product usually is
low-priced and is widely available. For a public library this type of material might
be newspapers or magazines, or perhaps a quick selection of other materials with
little browsing or research. These materials or services are usually located within
facility for easy and quick access.
240. database : A compendium of information on current and prospective
users that usually includes demographic data as well as use data, volume and
content. This is a privacy issue in American libraries. The address data of library
users can be called "point-of-sale (use) data and is a rich source of marketing data
for library management.
241. decennial census : In the U.S. this is a complete count of the
population every ten years. For example the next count is the year 2000, and
previous years 1990, 1908, etc. There is also a sample census which is taken for
hundreds of other population descriptive characteristics. For the library field
census data are identified that strongly indicate library use through research.
242. decision support system (DSS) : A decision support system
(marketing definition) is a systematic collection of data, techniques and
supporting software and hardware by which an organization gathers and interprets
relevant information from business and the environment and turns it into a basis for
making management decisions. A DSS differs from a management
information system in that it is designed to answer precise questions and what/if
questions. An example would be, 'What affect on system library use will there be
if Branch X is closed?'
243. Delphi technique : A frequently used method in futures research to
gain consensus opinion among experts about likely future events, through a series
of questionnaires.
244. demand : The number of units of a product sold in a market over a
period of time. For example, six thousand library books were circulated in Branch
X's market area last year.
245. demographics : Objective characteristics of consumers such as age,
income, education, sex or occupation (Assael.)
246. descriptive research : A research design in which the major emphasis is
on determining the frequency with which something occurs. For example, how
often users access the Internet in a given month.
247. destination merchandise : A type of merchandise that motivates or
triggers a trip to a specific store. A library's special collection on African history
is an example. This is also a 'specialty good.
248. developing country : Characteristics: 1) more than 33% of the population
is engaged in agriculture, less than 30% of population is urban; 2) at least 50% of
population is literate; and 3) highly developed industrial sectors and consumer
markets of significant per capita size.
249. diffusion of innovation : The spread of innovation with a market
group in stages--innovators (2- 5%), early adopters (10-15%), early majority (next
35%), late majority(next 35%), and laggards (final 5-10%.) Fair amount of
disagreement about the percentages.
250. direct marketing : Marketing efforts, in total directed toward a specific
targeted group--direct selling, direct mail, catalog or cable--for soliciting a
response from customer. A library may mail a library registration card to every
new mother in the hospital.
251. directional and departmental signage : A signage system that helps
guide the library user through the library and locate specific departments of
interest.
252. distribution : The marketing and carrying of products to customers
(bookmobiles, facilities, library loan.)
253. diversification (Wood) : Extends skills or experience from current
product or market activities rather than covering totally unfamiliar territory.
Customized online searches by reference librarians would extend their current
research in print skills.
254. dummy : Preliminary layout for an ad, or other print material.
255. dwelling unit : A single home or other unit in which a cohesive set
of individuals reside, and typically many good s are purchased in common.
256. knowledge : Consumers' meanings or beliefs about products, brands,
stores, that are stored in memory.
257. patronage motives : The motives that drive an individual/user toward
selection of a particular outlet, retailer, or supplier of services.
258. per capita income : A nation's or other geographic market's total income
divided by the number of persons in its population.
259. perception : Perception is the cognitive impression that is formed of
"reality" which in turn influences the individual's actions and behavior toward that object.
260. personality : Consistent pattern of responses to the stimuli from both
internal and external sources.
261. potential market : Set of users who profess some level of interest in a
designed market offer. (Kotler)
262. press conference : A convening of media by a person or organization
to explain, announce or expand on a particular subject.
263. psychographic segmentation : Dividing markets into segments on
the basis of consumer life styles.
264. public opinion : The consensus view of a population on a topic.
public policy A course of action pursued by the government pertaining to people
as a whole on which laws rest.
265. quality control : An ongoing analysis of operations, to verify goods
or service meet specified standards, or to better answer customer/user complaints.
Libraries have been criticized for not employing more quality control standards
on library services.
266. questionnaire : A document that is used to guide what questions are
to be asked respondents and in what order, sometimes lists the alternative
responses that are acceptable. An excellent research instrument for libraries to
assess customer satisfaction on exit interviews
267. range : The maximum distance a consumer is ordinarily willing to travel
for a good or service; as such it determines the outer limit of a store/library's
market area. Research in the library field indicate there is an average two mile
limit for a library user to travel to a branch, while for a central library with
specialized good, it may widen to even 10 or 15 miles. This research does not
allow for the travel limitations imposed by culture, age, or physical handicap, or
topographical barriers.
268. regression analysis : A statistical technique to derive an equation that
relates a single, continuous criterion variable to one or more continuous predictor
variables.
269. Reilly's law : A model used in trad area analysis to define the relative
ability of two cities to attract users from the area between them.
270. roles : The behavior that is expected of people in standard situations.
271. rural population : The part of the total population not classified as
urban
272. secondary shopping district : A cluster of stores outside the central
business district that serves a large population within a section or part of a large
city.
273. wealth : The aggregate of all possessions of economic good owned
by a person.
274. vicarious learning : The changes in an individuals behavior brought
about by observing the actions of others and the consequences of those actions.
Research indicates that immigrant adults often learn about the reading land library
habit through their children's same experiences at school.
275. vision : A guiding theme that articulates the nature of the
business/library and its intentions for the future, based upon how management
believes the environment will unfold. A vision is informed, share, competitive and
enabling.
276. underdeveloped country : Characteristics: small factories erected to
supply batteries, tires, footwear, clothing, building materials and packaged foods;
agricultural activity declines and egree of urbanization increases; available
educational effort expands and literacy rises.
277. underprivileged family : A family in social class that does not have
enough money to purchase the necessities, i.e., shelter, clothing and
transportation, appropriate for its class status.
278. unit control : The control of stock in terms of merchandise units rather
than i terms of dollar value. This is representative of a the number of books,
magazines, etc of a library collection.
279. urban population : Persons living in places of 2,500 or more
inhabitants incorporated as cities, villages, boroughs, or areas designated as such
by the US Census, with some exceptions.
280. utility : The state or quality of being useful. What is the utility of
marketing practices to the library field?
281. target market : The particular segment of a total population on
which the retailer focuses its merchandising expertise to satisfy that submarket in
order to accomplish its profit objectives. Or for the library, a target market might
be within the market area served, children 5-8 years old, for summer reading
programs, to increase juvenile use and registration.
282. technology : The purposeful application of scientific knowledge; an
environmental force that consists of inventions and innovations from applied
scientific and engineering research.
283. telephone interview : A telephone conversation between a representative
of the research organization, the interviewer, and a respondent or interviewee.
284. thumbnail : A rough sketch for a layout for a piece of print advertising.
285. transportation : A marketing function that adds time and place
utility to the product by moving it from where it is made to where it is purchased
and used. In includes all intermediate steps in the process.
286. diffusion model : A model representing the contagion or spread of
something through a population. (Examples: spread of air conditioning in Florida
and subsequent population growth, and spread of Library of Congress pre-printed
cards to American libraries.) Mathematical formulations are available to predict
spread/growth.
287. economic environment : Part of the macroenvironment encompassing
wealth, income, productivity, inflation, credit, employment, etc. which affect the
agency/library's markets and opportunities.
288. erratic demand : A pattern of demand for a product that is varied and
unpredictable, e.g., some best sellers, or specific online databases randomly
assigned in curriculum by teachers.
289. exploratory research : A research design in which the major emphasis is
on gaining ideas and insights.
290. goods : A product that has tangible form in contrast to services that
are intangible. A book versus a story read.
291. key success factors : The factors that are a necessary condition for
success in a given market. For example in a highly hispanic market, a library to
succeed would have spanish language materials.
292. market demand : The total volume of a product or service
bought/used by a specific groups of customers/users in a specified market area
during a specified period.
293. penetrated market : Actual set of users actually consuming the
product/service. (Kotler) 294. personal income : The current income received by persons
from all
sources less contributions for social insurance--e.g., Social Security (US).
295. personal interview : A direct, face-to face conversation between a
representative of the research organization (the interviewer) and a respondent or
interviewee.
296. physical inventory : An inventory determined by actual count and
evidenced by a listing of quantity, weight, or measure. Number of volumes,
periodicals, vides a library owns.
297. place : In the channels of distribution, the physical facilities point of
location.
298. point-of-purchase : Promotional materials placed at the contact sales
point designed to attract user interest or call attention to a special offer, e.g., 'Sign
up for Summer Reading Program.
299. point-of-sale(POS) : A data collection system that electronically receives
and stores bar code information derived from a sales transaction. This could the
zip codes for library users, facilitating the library in determining geographic
market are that users reside in.
300. population : The totality of cases that conforms to some designated
specifications.
301. poverty level : The poverty level is based solely on money income
and updated every yearr to reflect changes in the consumer price index, used to
classify families as being above or below the poverty level.
302. price : The formal ratio that indicates the quantities of money goods or
services needed to acquire a given quantity of goods or services. For a library user
price may come in the form of time the library users must expend to obtain library
materials or services.
303. product life cycle : The four stages products go through from birth to
death: introductory, growth, maturity, and decline.
304. product mix : The full set of products offered by an organization e.g.,
books, videos, storyhours, etc.
305. product positioning : The way users/consumers view competitive brands
or types of products. This can be manipulated by the organization/library. The
library's video collection, available for free, is competitive with local video stores
that charge, if video collections are comparable. If the collections are not, the
library is differentiating the video collection from the video store.
306. promotion mix : The various communication techniques such as
advertising, personal selling, sales promotion, and public relations/ product
publicity available to the marketer to achieve specific goals. A library may use a
combination of newspaper editorial, public service announcements (PSAs) on
radio and possible television, if no budget is available for advertising.
307. psychographic analysis : A technique that investigates how people
live, what interests them, what they like--also called lifestlye analysis or AIO
because it relies on a number of statements about a person's activities, interests
and opinions.
308. public relations : The form of communication management that seeks
to make use of publicity and other nonpaid forms of promotion and information to
influence feelings, opinions or beliefs about the agency/library and its offerings.
This is a traditional form of communication for library management, as paid
advertising media is rarely used.
309. public sector : Those marketing activities that are a carried out by government
agencies for public service rather than for profit.
310. public service announcement (PSA) : An advertisement or
commercial that is carried by an advertising vehicle at no cost as a public service
to its readers, viewers, or listeners. While the no cost aspect is appealing, a library
or other agency utilizing this media quickly realizes there is no control on the
most effective time of placement.
311. quality of life : Sometimes measured by income, wealth, safety,
recreation and education facilities, education health, aesthetics, leisure time and
the like.
312. Quantity discount : A reduction in price for volume purchases.__

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